Not to beat a dead horse, but I'm still amazed by people who don't have functional RSS feeds. I just realized this morning that I almost never read Romanesko anymore. The only reason is that I read everything through Bloglines now, and he doesn't have a feed. The daily emails pile up in my "to read" box, and I never read 'em.
The point here isn't RSS, but the fact that the number of mediums is exploding, and at an insanely low cost threshold-- You always have to be adding to the arsenal.
What does this have to do with the price of tea in Peg-land?
I've had several chats in the past couple days about the incumbents' ability to take on our tactics to beat us. A good example of that phenomenon is the quick Quick launch that crushed the AM Journal Express.
Yesterday I showed a supersmart newspaper industry guru what we plan to do. I asked him how long it would take the DMN (or any other incumbent), from the point they decided to copy our tactics, to the day they could pull it off. (He had just brought up Quick as a cautionary tale.)
"Please say three months," I prayed. "C'mon, gimme 90 freakin' days."
He paused thoughtfully, grimaced slightly, then grinned and looked me straight in the eye.
"One year."
That was the greatest endorsement we've gotten so far-- because, as I discussed with another newsie last night, by the time they get there, we'll already be on to the next medium, while still delivering all the "old" stuff.
Who had heard of or cared about RSS a year ago? Who knew what a blog was three years ago? Any content creator can have both now, for free or close to it.
The Times, they're a changin...
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ABC screwed the pooch